Popular Articles

Nearly free but hardly easy
Markets: Everyone knows money is not a panacea. Cash cannot cure broken hearts, and all that. But the news from Dubai and the foreign exchange markets shows that ample supplies of money can’t even solve all financial problems.

Sensex rebounds, up 20pts
The Sensex has mangaed to erase all of its losses and has rebounded into the positive zone. The index is now at 15,646, up 17 points.

News of the day

Pro-dam activists demand early resumption of suspended projects
Ahead of the first meeting of the Ganga River Basin Authority (GRBA) in New Delhi on October 5, intensive lobbying is on to build pressure on the Centre and the Uttarakhand government for the resumption of three hydel projects — 600-Mw Lohari Nagpala, 480-Mw Pala Maneri and 381-Mw Bhaironghati — which were suspended under the pressure of environmentalists and VHP leaders.
International Business

'H1N1 virus has not mutated, vaccines on track'

The head of the World Health Organisation (WHO) said today that the swine flu virus had apparently not yet mutated into a more serious disease and that the development of vaccines was proceeding on track. - US body to work with Andhra govt - Works still incomplete on Dasara eve - Inflation may rise to 6% by March next year: RBI - Obama announces plan to expand fight against swine flu - H1N1 drug trial talks next week - Few takers for govt offer on H1N1 vaccine trials The vaccines for (A)H1N1 influenza produced so far have been very effective, WHO Director-General Margaret Chan said at the opening ceremony for the organisation"s annual Western Pacific meeting. "The virus can mutate any time. But from April to now, we can see from the data given to us by laboratories worldwide that the virus is still very similar (to the previous state)," Chan told reporters. Ideally, three billion doses of vaccines could be produced worldwide annually, she added, noting that China had already begun to vaccinate people. Chan added the Hong Kong government could relax its measures against a swine flu outbreak "step-by-step", advising them in the long-run to focus resources on saving patients and reducing the number of serious cases. The Director-General said that only high-risk patients such as the elderly, the obese and those with underlying illnesses would be severely affected by the disease.


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